Calendar January 2025 Singapore with Public Holidays
The Singapore calendar for 2025 has 31 days, from Wednesday, 1 January 2025 to Friday, 31 January 2025. This month includes 3 public holidays. Key holidays this month include New Year's Day and Chinese New Year.
January 2025 Holidays in Singapore
- Wednesday 1 January 2025 - New Year's Day - Public
- Wednesday 29 January 2025 - Chinese New Year - Public
- Thursday 30 January 2025 - Chinese New Year - Public
Chinese Calendar in January 2025
Astronomical Chinese calendar (120°E meridian). Solar term times in SGT (UTC+8).
Lunar months
- 十二月 2024 農曆 (Lunar months): 31 Dec 2024 – 28 Jan, 29 days.
- 正月 2025 農曆 (Lunar months): 29 Jan – 27 Feb, 30 days.
Chinese observances
- Laba Festival (臘八節) (Chinese observances): Tuesday, 7 January 2025. 十二月初八 · 甲辰年.
- Chinese New Year Eve (除夕) (Chinese observances): Tuesday, 28 January 2025. 十二月廿九 · 甲辰年.
- Chinese New Year (春節) (Chinese observances): Wednesday, 29 January 2025. 正月初一 · 乙巳年.
Solar terms 節氣
- 小寒 Xiǎohán, Minor Cold (Solar terms 節氣): Sunday, 5 January 2025 at 10:30.
- 大寒 Dàhán, Major Cold (Solar terms 節氣): Monday, 20 January 2025 at 03:52.
Moon Phases in January 2025 over Singapore
Times shown in SGT (UTC+8). Dimmed rows fall outside January.
- New Moon on 31 Dec 2024 06:27 MYT — 0% illuminated (outside January 2025)
- First Quarter on 7 Jan 07:56 MYT — 50% illuminated
- Full Moon on 14 Jan 06:27 MYT — 100% illuminated
- Last Quarter on 22 Jan 04:31 MYT — 50% illuminated
- New Moon on 29 Jan 20:36 MYT — 0% illuminated
- First Quarter on 5 Feb 16:02 MYT — 50% illuminated (outside January 2025)
- Full Moon on 12 Feb 21:54 MYT — 100% illuminated (outside January 2025)
- Last Quarter on 21 Feb 01:33 MYT — 50% illuminated (outside January 2025)
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I read the Chinese lunar dates on this calendar?
Chinese lunar days appear as small orange numbers in the bottom-left corner of each day cell. On the first day of a new lunar month, the day number is replaced by the Chinese month label (for example 正月 for the first month, 二月 for the second). The lunar calendar is computed astronomically using the 120°E meridian (China Standard Time), which is the official reference for the traditional Chinese calendar. A small orange dot below a date marks a traditional Chinese observance such as Lunar New Year, Qingming, or the Mid-Autumn Festival.
How accurate are the moon phases shown?
The four principal moon phases (new moon, first quarter, full moon, and last quarter) are computed using standard astronomical algorithms and displayed in Singapore Time (SGT, UTC+8). Phase times are typically accurate to within a few minutes of published ephemerides.
How do I see the details for a specific day?
Click any date on the calendar to see a quick summary, including holiday records for that day. For a full breakdown, click "View details" at the bottom of the popup to open the day detail page.